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Johannes Agricola In Meditation
There's heaven above, and night by nightI look right through its gorgeous roof;No suns and moons though e'er so brightAvail to stop me; splendor-proofI keep the broods of stars aloof:For I intend to get to God,For 't is to God I speed so fast,For in God's breast, my own abode,Those shoals of dazzling glory, passed,I lay my spirit down at last.I lie where I have always lain,God smiles as he has always smiled;Ere suns and moons could wax and wane,Ere stars were thundergirt, or piledThe heavens, God thought on me his child;Ordained a life for me, arrayedIts circumstances every oneTo the minutest; ay, God saidThis head this hand should rest uponThus, ere he fashioned star or sun.And having thus created me,Thus roote...
Robert Browning
Horace II, 3.
Be tranquil, Dellius, I pray;For though you pine your life awayWith dull complaining breath,Or speed with song and wine each day--Still, still your doom is death.Where the white poplar and the pineIn glorious arching shade combineAnd the brook singing goes,Bid them bring store of nard and wineAnd garlands of the rose.Let's live while chance and youth obtain--Soon shall you quit this fair domainKissed by the Tiber's gold,And all your earthly pride and gainSome heedless heir shall hold.One ghostly boat shall some time bearFrom scenes of mirthfulness or careEach fated human soul!--Shall waft and leave his burden whereThe waves of Lethe roll.So come, I pri' thee, Dellius, mine--Let's sing our...
Eugene Field
Rachel
IIn paris all lookd hot and like to fade.Brown in the garden of the Tuileries,Brown with September, droopd the chestnut-trees.Twas dawn; a brougham rolld through the streets, and madeHalt at the white and silent colonnadeOf the French Theatre. Worn with disease,Rachel, with eyes no gazing can appease,Sate in the brougham, and those blank walls surveyd.She follows the gay world, whose swarms have fledTo Switzerland, to Baden, to the Rhine;Why stops she by this empty play-house drear?Ah, where the spirit its highest life hath led,All spots, matchd with that spot, are less divine;And Rachels Switzerland, her Rhine, is here!IIUnto a lonely villa in a dellAbove the fragrant warm Provencal shoreT...
Matthew Arnold
Grandfather's Love
They said he sent his love to me,They wouldn't put it in my hand,And when I asked them where it wasThey said I couldn't understand.I thought they must have hidden it,I hunted for it all the day,And when I told them so at nightThey smiled and turned their heads away.They say that love is something kind,That I can never see or touch.I wish he'd sent me something else,I like his cough-drops twice as much.
Sara Teasdale
Lean Down.
Lean down and lift me higher, Josephine!From the Eternal Hills hast thou not seenHow I do strive for heights? but lacking wings,I cannot grasp at once those better thingsTo which I in my inmost soul aspire.Lean down and lift me higher.I grope along - not desolate or sad,For youth and hope and health all keep me glad;But too bright sunlight, sometimes, makes us blind,And I do grope for heights I cannot find.Oh, thou must know my one supreme desire -Lean down and lift me higher.Not long ago we trod the self-same way.Thou knowest how, from day to fleeting dayOur souls were vexed with trifles, and our feet,Were lured aside to by-paths which seemed sweet,But only served to hinder and to tire;Lean down and lift me higher.
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Translations. - Psyches Mourning. (From Von Salis-Seewis.)
Psyche moans, in deep-sunk, darksome prison,For redemption; ah! for light she aches;Fears, hopes, after every noise doth listen--Whether Fate her bars of iron breaks.Bound are Psyche's pinions--airy, soaring;Yet high-hearted is she, groaning low;Knows that under clouds whence rain is pouringSprouts the palm that crowns the victor's brow;Knows among the thorns the rose yet reigneth;Golden flowers spring from the desert graveShe her garland through denial gaineth,And her strength is steeled by winds that rave.'Tis through lack that she her blisses buyeth;Sorrow's dream comes true by longing long;Lest light break the sleep wherein she lieth,Round her tree of life the shadows throng.Psyche's wail is but a fluted sadness
George MacDonald
Another For The Briar-Rose.
O treacherous scent, O thorny sight,O tangle of world's wrong and right,What art thou 'gainst my armour's gleamBut dusky cobwebs of a dream?Beat down, deep sunk from every gleamOf hope, they lie and dully dream;Men once, but men no more, that LoveTheir waste defeated hearts should move.Here sleeps the world that would not love!Let it sleep on, but if He moveTheir hearts in humble wise to waitOn his new-wakened fair estate.O won at last is never late!Thy silence was the voice of fate;Thy still hands conquered in the strife;Thine eyes were light; thy lips were life.
William Morris
?ò ???ó? (Greek Poems - Poems and Prose Remains, Vol II)
I have seen higher holier things than these,And therefore must to these refuse my heart,Yet am I panting for a little ease;Ill take, and so depart.Ah, hold! the heart is prone to fall away,Her high and cherished visions to forget,And if thou takest, how wilt thou repaySo vast, so dread a debt?How will the heart, which now thou trustest, thenCorrupt, yet in corruption mindful yet,Turn with sharp stings upon itself! Again,Bethink thee of the debt!Hast thou seen higher, holier things than these,And therefore must to these thy heart refuse?With the true best, alack, how ill agreesThat best that thou wouldst choose!The Summum Pulchrum rests in heaven above;Do thou, as best thou mayst, thy duty doAmid the things...
Arthur Hugh Clough
My Heart.
I heard, in darkness, on my bed, The beating of my heartTo servant feet and regnant head A common life impart,By the liquid cords, in every thread Unbroken as they start.Night, with its power to silence day, Filled up my lonely room;All motion quenching, save what lay Beyond its passing doom,Where in his shed the workman gay Went on despite the gloom.I listened, and I knew the sound, And the trade that he was plying;For backwards, forwards, bound and bound, 'Twas a shuttle, flying, flying;Weaving ever life's garment round, Till the weft go out with sighing.I said, O mystic thing, thou goest On working in the dark;In space's shoreless sea thou rowest, Concealed with...
Rhymes On The Road. Extract IV. Milan.
The Picture Gallery.--Albano's Rape of Proserpine.--Reflections.-- Universal Salvation.--Abraham sending away Agar, by Guercino.--Genius.Went to the Brera--saw a Dance of Loves By smooth ALBANO! him whose pencil teemsWith Cupids numerous as in summer groves The leaflets are or motes in summer beams.'Tis for the theft of Enna's flower from earth,These urchins celebrate their dance of mirthRound the green tree, like fays upon a heath-- Those that are nearest linkt in order bright,Cheek after cheek, like rose-buds in a wreath;And those more distant showing from beneath The others' wings their little eyes of light.While see! among the clouds, their eldest brother But just flown up tells with a smile of blissThis p...
Thomas Moore
Sonnet VI
Give me the treble of thy horns and hoofs,The ponderous undertones of 'bus and tram,A garret and a glimpse across the roofsOf clouds blown eastward over Notre Dame,The glad-eyed streets and radiant gatheringsWhere I drank deep the bliss of being young,The strife and sweet potential flux of thingsI sought Youth's dream of happiness among!It walks here aureoled with the city-light,Forever through the myriad-featured massFlaunting not far its fugitive embrace, -Heard sometimes in a song across the night,Caught in a perfume from the crowds that pass,And when love yields to love seen face to face.
Alan Seeger
The Flower of Mending
(To Eudora, after I had had certain dire adventures.)When Dragon-fly would fix his wings,When Snail would patch his house,When moths have marred the overcoatOf tender Mister Mouse,The pretty creatures go with hasteTo the sunlit blue-grass hillsWhere the Flower of Mending yields the waxAnd webs to help their ills.The hour the coats are waxed and webbedThey fall into a dream,And when they wake the ragged robesAre joined without a seam.My heart is but a dragon-fly,My heart is but a mouse,My heart is but a haughty snailIn a little stony house.Your hand was honey-comb to heal,Your voice a web to bind.You were a Mending Flower to meTo cure my heart and mind.
Vachel Lindsay
Sonnet XCVIII.
Since my griev'd mind some energy regains, Industrious habits can, at times, repress The weight of filial woe, the deep distress Of life-long separation; yet its pains,Oft do they throb along these fever'd veins. - My rest has lost its balm, the fond caress Wont the dear aged forehead to impress At midnight, as he slept; - nor now obtainsMy uprising the blest news, that cou'd impart Joy to the morning, when its dawn had brought Some health to that weak Frame, o'er which my heartWith fearful fondness yearn'd, and anxious thought. - Time, and the HOPE that robs the mortal Dart Of its fell sting, shall cheer me - as they ought.
Anna Seward
The House Of Dust: Part 03: 07: Porcelain
You see that porcelain ranged there in the window,Platters and soup-plates done with pale pink rosebuds,And tiny violets, and wreaths of ivy?See how the pattern clings to the gleaming edges!Theyre works of art, minutely seen and felt,Each petal done devoutly. Is it failureTo spend your blood like this?Study them . . . you will see there, in the porcelain,If you stare hard enough, a sort of swimmingOf lights and shadows, ghosts within a crystal,My brain unfolding! There youll see me sittingDay after day, close to a certain window,Looking down, sometimes, to see the people . . .Sometimes my wife comes there to speak to me . . .Sometimes the grey cat waves his tail around me . . .Goldfish swim in a bowl, glisten in sunlight,Dilate to...
Conrad Aiken
Mare Rubrum
1858Flash out a stream of blood-red wine,For I would drink to other days,And brighter shall their memory shine,Seen flaming through its crimson blaze!The roses die, the summers fade,But every ghost of boyhood's dreamBy nature's magic power is laidTo sleep beneath this blood-red stream!It filled the purple grapes that lay,And drank the splendors of the sun,Where the long summer's cloudless dayIs mirrored in the broad Garonne;It pictures still the bacchant shapesThat saw their hoarded sunlight shed, -The maidens dancing on the grapes, -Their milk-white ankles splashed with red.Beneath these waves of crimson lie,In rosy fetters prisoned fast,Those flitting shapes that never die, -The swift-winged visions o...
Oliver Wendell Holmes
The Well-Beloved
I wayed by star and planet shineTowards the dear one's homeAt Kingsbere, there to make her mineWhen the next sun upclomb.I edged the ancient hill and woodBeside the Ikling Way,Nigh where the Pagan temple stoodIn the world's earlier day.And as I quick and quicker walkedOn gravel and on green,I sang to sky, and tree, or talkedOf her I called my queen.- "O faultless is her dainty form,And luminous her mind;She is the God-created normOf perfect womankind!"A shape whereon one star-blink gleamedGlode softly by my side,A woman's; and her motion seemedThe motion of my bride.And yet methought she'd drawn erstwhileAdown the ancient leaze,Where once were pile and peristyleFor men's id...
Thomas Hardy
Unknown Ideal
Whose is the voice that will not let me rest? I hear it speak.Where is the shore will gratify my quest, Show what I seek?Not yours, weak Muse, to mimic that far voice, With halting tongue;No peace, sweet land, to bid my heart rejoice Your groves among.Whose is the loveliness I know is by, Yet cannot place?Is it perfection of the sea or sky, Or human face?Not yours, my pencil, to delineate The splendid smile!Blind in the sun, we struggle on with Fate That glows the while.Whose are the feet that pass me, echoing On unknown ways?Whose are the lips that only part to sing Through all my days?Not yours, fond youth, to fill mine eager eyes ...
Dora Sigerson Shorter
To The Quiet Observer
AFTER HIS LONG SILENCEDear old friend of us all in needWho know the worth of a friend indeed,How rejoiced are we all to learn Of your glad return.We who have missed your voice so long -Even as March might miss the songOf the sugar-bird in the maples when They're tapped again.Even as the memory of theseBlended sweets, - the sap of the treesAnd the song of the birds, and the old camp too, We think of you.Hail to you, then, with welcomes deepAs grateful hearts may laugh or weep! -You give us not only the bird that sings, But all good things.
James Whitcomb Riley